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The most
difficult of intellectual disciplines is certainly the history of science.
It requires the virtues of both the historian – exhaustive acquaintance with
what can be masses of documents – and the practicing scientist – mastery of
conceptually challenging subjects that more often than not involve technical
ability in mathematics. You can tell when one side or the other is lacking.
Without the history, scientific historians are prone to draw unfounded and
often arbitrary conclusions about influence, tradition and scientific
revolution (The real story of the multiple sources of seventeenth century
atomic theory and its variations is a good example). Without the science,
historians will as likely as not make comparisons based on accidental
likenesses and differences. Their histories will read more like histories of
literary themes or metaphors.
Koyré
notoriously inclines to the latter fault. He rarely asks whether a
scientific theory or philosophical argument from the past is valid or not, a
question his chosen subject uniquely demands since, unlike the objects of a
Panofskian iconology, science moves in the atmosphere of debate and
verification. (Bennett, by the way, goes too far in the other direction: Not
enough history, not enough concern that 17th century issues such
as, for example the distinction between space and matter, though related,
might have meant something different from their contemporary counterparts.
He treats “early modern” texts like a paper just written by that clever
Assistant Professor down the hall, ignoring significant differences in
meaning, intent and context. Without the history, early science sounds
puzzlingly naïve and primitive, such that one wonders how it could ever have
led to clever people like ourselves.)
Entretiens sur Descartes |